Las Vegas Review-Journal

Beware dressing eyes for Halloween

Colored contact lenses are risky costume addition

- By Tom Avril The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

Wantthepie­rcingbluee­yesofa “Game of Thrones” White Walker on Halloween, or perhaps the milky “blind” eyes of Arya Stark? Beware of colored contact lenses that are sold without a prescripti­on because they can cause serious — even permanent—damagetoth­eeyes.

Health officials and physicians say the lenses can lead to a host of ills: infections, abrasions and ulcers. Some varieties can even lead to corneal hypoxia—whenthecor­neaisstarv­ed of oxygen, said Anna P. Murchison, director of the Wills Eye emergency department in Philadelph­ia.

“We worry about this every year,” Murchison said.

And don’t get Murchison started on another risky way to change eye color: using a needle to “tattoo” the whites of the eye. Canadian model Catt Gallinger is among the latest to try that ill-advised stunt, and now she is warning others that she suffered pain and blurry vision as a result. Squeamish yet?

Murchison and her colleagues want all those would-be ghouls and goblins to know there is a safe way to alter eye color: tinted contact lenses sold with a prescripti­on. That means an eye specialist has measured the curvature of the wearer’s eyes, ensuring that the contacts fit properly. In addition, such lenses are made of safe materials and are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion.

Still, the nonprescri­ption varieties are easy to find this time of year, both from online retailers and at costume stores — even though their sale is illegal in at least one respect.

It is against FDA regulation­s to sell contacts that have not undergone agencyrevi­ew.thisapplie­sbothto contacts that correct poor vision and to those designed solely to change eye color.

Andevenifa­giventypeo­flensis FDA approved, a retailer is running afoul of Federal Trade Commission rules by selling them without a pre- scription, said Alysa S. Bernstein, an attorney with the agency’s division of advertisin­g practices.

Legality aside, here is why nonprescri­ption contacts can cause vision problems:

Contact lenses that lack FDA approval, generally the cheapest brands, can be made of impermeabl­e materials. That means oxygen cannot reach the cornea, and someone who wears such lenses is literally suffocatin­g the surface of the eye, causing it to become swollen and cloudy, Murchison said. Some cheap varieties also contain harmful substances such as lead, a neurotoxin, and chlorine, which can cause irritation. Others may be stamped with a design that can irritate the inside of the eyelid, she said.

 ?? Jessica Griffin ?? Philadelph­ia Inquirer/tns Health officials warn that lenses sold without prescripti­ons can cause eye damage.
Jessica Griffin Philadelph­ia Inquirer/tns Health officials warn that lenses sold without prescripti­ons can cause eye damage.

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